The present case stems from charges of employment discrimination in the United States Postal Inspection Service. In 1972 the plaintiff, Gloria Martinez De Volld, was one of two Mexican-American clerks at the GS-6 level in the San Antonio domicile office of the Postal Inspection Service. When a third clerk, an Anglo-American, was promoted to a higher position at the GS-7 level, plaintiff lodged an administrative complaint charging that she had not been considered for the position because of her national origin. Several administrative appeals later, the United States Civil Service Commission Board of Appeals and Review found that Ms. De Volld and the other Mexican-American clerk, Marie J. Trevino, had indeed suffered discrimination based on national origin. As a remedy the board ordered that both be promoted to the position in question or to a position of like grade, status and pay in the Postal Inspection Service or in any office of the Postal Service in the San Antonio area. Shortly thereafter the two Mexican-American clerks filed separate suits for enforcement of this decision.
*1164 Meanwhile, however, the United States Postal Service requested that the Civil Service Commission reopen the case. The Postal Service did not contest the finding of discrimination but argued that the remedy granted — promotion of both Mexican-American clerks — was unauthorized by law, since there had been no finding that either of the two Mexican-Americans would have received the promotion even in the absence of discrimination. The Postal Service argued that such a finding was required for a promotion remedy under the Civil Service’s own regulations, 5 C.F.R. 713.271(b).
The district court stayed proceedings pending the Civil Service Commission’s reconsideration of its remedy; it also consolidated the plaintiff’s suit with that of Ms. Trevino. Upon reconsideration the Civil Service Commission determined that Ms. Trevino, the other Mexican-American clerk, was the best qualified of all three candidates for the disputed position; it thus concluded that she would have received the promotion but for discrimination and awarded her a promotion with back pay as authorized by 5 C.F.R. 713.271(b). As for the plaintiff, Ms. De Volld, the Civil Service Commission in effect determined that the discrimination against her had not deprived her of the position, since she was not the best qualified candidate. The commission did order, however, that she be given priority consideration for the next vacancy for which she was qualified. The Civil Service regulations also authorize this remedy.
Upon being advised by the parties of this disposition, by the Civil Service Commission, the district court dismissed the case as moot. From this dismissal plaintiff De Volld appeals.
De Volld’s appeal is based in large part on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Chandler v. Roudebush,
This argument will not bear analysis. It must be kept in mind that only one person could be promoted to the position in question. Both Mexican-American clerks were concededly treated discriminatorily in that both were passed over because of their national origin. But the blunt fact remains that only one of the two — if either — could receive the promotion. When the Civil Service Commission determined that the deserving candidate was Trevino, the other Mexican-American clerk, it became indisputable that whatever discrimination the *1165 plaintiff had suffered because of her national origin, that discrimination no longer kept her from the promotion. Put another way, whatever motives the Commission may have had in choosing between two people of the same ethnic origin, discrimination cannot have been among them. We may even suppose for the sake of argument that the Civil Service Commission wrongly decided the question of the candidates’ respective qualifications. Any unfairness in the choice between the plaintiff and Trevino cannot have had its source in discrimination based on national origin; this being so, there is no Title VII action.
Thus, while the plaintiff might possibly challenge the Civil Service Commission’s determination as to her relative merits on some other ground, she cannot do so on the basis of discrimination under Title VII. The plaintiff’s Title VII claim entails a showing that her nonpromotion flowed from discrimination based on national origin. Since the Commission’s action has made it impossible for her to gain this crucial point and since she has no claim aside from Title VII, the district court could properly regard the case as moot.
The plaintiff wrongly supposes that the district court tacitly accepted the Civil Service Commission’s administrative findings in arriving at its determination of mootness. This is not so. The district court did not have to accept these findings or review them in any way but had only to look to the fact of the Commission’s award to another Mexican-American — a fact of which it was informed by both parties — to observe that discrimination against Mexican-Americans could not have entered into the final award of the single promotion at issue. Hence, the district court’s action did not challenge the plaintiff’s right to a de novo trial under Chandler; Chandler itself cannot mean that a court must give a plaintiff a de novo trial even when it is clear from the outset that the plaintiff cannot prove a crucial element of his or her case.
We note that we do not deal here with the case in which the Civil Service may decide that, despite discrimination against Mexican-Americans, the Anglo-American is after all the better candidate. Such a, case could require the court to reconsider de novo the issues as to qualifications raised before the administrative body. In such a case the administrative disposition in itself would not have rendered fruitless any attempt to prove discrimination as the “but for” cause of the Mexican-American’s treatment.
See Huntley v. Department of Health, Education & Welfare,
It may be true that the district court could have retained jurisdiction over the case on the basis of a claim relating not to Title VII discrimination but to the Civil Service Commission’s purportedly incorrect decision as to Ms. De Volld’s qualifications relative to Ms. Trevino’s; indeed the court might have done so even though the plaintiff did not formally invoke jurisdiction over such a claim.
See Mobile Mechanical Contractors Association, Inc. v. Carlough,
AFFIRMED. .
Notes
. Ms. De Volld has now quit her job with the Postal Inspection Service, but she still claims the back pay she would have received with retroactive promotion, along with the attorneys’ fees available to a prevailing party under Title VII.
